“And the officer started shouting at me aggressively, ‘On the ground, on the ground.’

“And I was like, ‘No, I’m still standing,’ while I was trying to get to the cables to get them out and that’s when they hit me with a second Taser.”

Liberal Democrat MP Norman Lamb said: “It’s not appropriate to use this technology in a mental health setting… particularly when it’s used against young people.

“There are circumstances in which force is necessary – when there is an immediate threat to life, either to the life of the individual concerned or to someone else’s life,” he said.

But, he added: “It’s very hard to imagine the circumstances in which Tasers are necessary in any situation in mental health settings.

“Before they were designed and invented we got by without them, so is it not possible to get by without them in this day and age?”

The government said Tasers were “an important tactical option for specially trained police officers, but their use in mental health settings should only be a last resort and, where possible, staff trained in de-escalation techniques should always be the first response”.

A spokesman added officers who used them had to complete a comprehensive training process.

For Pat Kenny, although he believes a Taser shouldn’t have been fired at him, he does think it led to him getting the help he needed.

“It finally got me into a proper assessment,” he says.

“I’d been falling through the net for years.

“Now, I had the diagnosis of depression and PTSD [post-traumatic stress disorder] and borderline personality disorder.